Success Magazine: Tony Robbins’ Secrets for Effective Goal Setting

Tony Robbins shares his proven techniques for setting effective goals in an article published by Success Magazine
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This article was originally published by Success Magazine on December 4, 2018

Tony Robbins, our cover subject for the Spring issue, is no stranger to setting and achieving his goals. Over the course of his career, Robbins has penned five best-selling books, worked with millions of people through his annual seminars, and coached countless celebrities, politicians and athletes. Now, he manages over 50 businesses that gross $6 billion in annual sales.

At his annual seminars and conferences, attendees often ask Robbins what the secret is to effectively setting and achieving their goals.

“You need a vision that’s large, and you need a plan that’s achievable,” he says.

By the first week of February, most people have already given up on their New Year’s resolutions. Why does this always happen?

“Because it wasn’t a resolution,” Robbins says. “You didn’t resolve to do this. It was the new year, and everybody talks about it, so you thought about a couple of things you’d kind of like to do or kind of like to change. But you didn’t resolve that this is what I’m going to do no matter what.”

Set and achieve your goals in 2019 and beyond with these strategies from Robbins:

1. Remember: The pursuit matters just as much as the goal.

Take, for example, that your goal is to make $100,000 for your new business in 2019. Instead of focusing on that dollar amount you hope to achieve, you should instead consider why you’re pursuing this goal and how the journey to achieve it will help you grow as a person.

“The purpose of a goal is not to get it,” Robbins says. “The purpose of a goal is who you become in pursuit of it.”

If you grow in the process of achieving your goal, then that is success.

2. Set a goal with the right scope in mind.

People often give up on their New Year’s resolutions because they set goals that are too lofty.

“Most people overestimate what they’re going to do in a year, and they underestimate what they can do in a decade or two or three or four,”

Try to set a goal that you can reasonably achieve within one year. If it’s something that will be difficult to achieve in that timeframe, you might become overwhelmed and give up. If your goal is something that will take more than one year to achieve, try to set a benchmark for what you’d like to accomplish in this first year, and then build from there.

3. Focus on what you want, not what you don’t want.

One major mistake people make when setting goals is focusing on what they don’t want, not what they do want. Instead of saying, I don’t want to be fat, so I will lose 40 pounds, reframe your goal to, I want to be healthy and fit, so I will lose enough weight to be at a healthy BMI.

If you’re struggling to identify the core of your goal and what you truly want, Robbins offers this simple advice: Do something physical.

“You’re going to get depressed if you drop your shoulders, drop your head, speak slowly and think about what you’re afraid of,” Robbins says. “But if I get you to go for a really intense run and we start to focus on what you want, you’re going to come up with what you want.”

People often identify what they don’t want instead of what they do want because of fear. Try to reframe your mindset so you’re not being guided by fear, but rather facing it head on.

“Most achievers are afraid of living a life falling short of who they are, what they stand for and what they want to give to their kids or their wife or the universe,” Robbins says. “Because of that, they’ll overcome their fears. You can turn fear on itself.”

4. Don’t stop after you’ve achieved your goal.

It’s simple: You should never stop setting goals.

“Hundreds of people have achieved massive goals,” Robbins says. “And then their brain went, Is this all there is? I worked so hard for this and it’s not the same as I thought it would be. That is success without fulfillment, and that’s the ultimate failure.”

Take the example above. Let’s say you achieved your goal of making $100,000 for your business. You’ll feel a burst of pride and an uptick in energy right when you hit that goal. But then what? Without another goal to pursue and a daily sense of meaning, you will feel lost.

“When you’re heading toward a goal and you’re about to achieve it, you have to fit in the next ones,” Robbins says. “Because otherwise, there will be a drop in energy.”

Without something to pursue or to look forward to, you run the risk of your life feeling stagnant. “We all need a compelling future,” Robbins says. “We all need something that we’re going for that makes us feel alive. If you don’t, you’re going to feel frustrated, bored and pissed off, and you’re going to start looking at other things to blame.”

Robbins says he has seen this happen countless times with businesspeople he has coached. “So many guys who sold their companies and made $200 million dollars, half a billion dollars, a billion dollars—they only lasted a few years before they had to get back in the game,” Robbins says. “The business made them grow, made them learn, made them expand, made them contribute.”

5. Don’t worry about not achieving your goals.

What matters isn’t that the goal is achieved, Robbins says, but rather that you grow as a person on the path to achieving it.

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